Trump's lead in Georgia shrinks to less than 2,000 votes: Biden moves neck-and-neck with the president with 16,000 ballots still to be counted and BOTH candidates on 49.4% of the vote
- Joe Biden and Donald Trump are just about neck and neck in Georgia after the president's lead dipped below 2,000 votes on Thursday night
- The narrow lead puts both candidates in equal standing in terms of percentage points with each having 49.4 per cent of the vote
- Georgia carries 16 electoral college votes and could tip the win for Biden if he holds his Arizona lead
- Neither Arizona nor Nevada say they will give their final results until Friday - prolonging the wait even more
- They are not offering up real explanations for why it's taking so long to count the last votes when so many more have already been counted without issue
- Pennsylvania, the other major swing state, has not yet been called but that may happen on Thursday
- Biden has 264 electoral college votes with Arizona and 253 without it; Trump has 214
Joe Biden and Donald Trump are just about neck and neck in Georgia after the president's lead dipped below 2,000 votes in the latest ballot count on Thursday night.
Trump remains ahead but only by a slim margin of 1,775, putting both candidates in equal standing in terms of percentage points with each holding 49.4 per cent of the vote.
There are now approximately 14,000 ballots that still need to be processed in the state in addition to the 8,900 overseas and military ballots that are due to arrive by 5pm on Friday.
Of the outstanding votes, about 5,000 will come from Clayton County, a largely democratic county, which are expected to be counted by midnight, the county's board of elections directors, Shauna Dozier told CNN.
Trump's standing in Georgia has swiftly weakened in the last 24 hours, having been up 9,000 votes on Thursday morning and 18,000 on Wednesday night.
Biden could win the election with Georgia, which amounts to 16 electoral college points, if he holds on to his lead in Arizona.
The result in Arizona is not expected until Friday because there are still 285,000 votes left to count. About 200,000 of those will come from Maricopa County, where officials are expected to update the count by 11am.
Officials in both Arizona and Nevad - where only 51,000 need to be counted - say they need at least another day to get through them and get through them accurately, despite the fact that they've rattled through many, many more votes in the last few days alone.
Trump remains ahead but only by a slim margin of 1,775, putting both candidates in equal standing in terms of percentage points with each holding 49.4 per cent of the vote
In one Georgia county, there was a corrupt memory card on one scanner which meant 400 had to be recounted. Officials in some counties are also using paper ballots for the first time in 20 years because they voted earlier this year that machine voting was not secretive enough. They are then scanning all of the paper votes which is an 'arduous' process, it was said on Thursday.
Speaking earlier on Thursday, Georgia's Voting System Implementation Manager, Gabriel Sterling, said there was nothing suspicious or strange about the process, but that elections were never normally so close so it doesn't always have to come down to an official count.
'We can't know how long the process will take. We hope to have clarity but "done" is a very relative term at this point.
'As we've been stating for weeks and months, it's going to take time. The effort here is to make sure everybody's legal vote is counted properly.
'The issue we have in Georgia is it's a close vote. There's other states that have more votes to count than we do but it's a wide margin so nobody cares,' Sterling said.
Why it is taking so long to reach a conclusion is a question that millions of frustrated Americans are asking and it's being heard around the world. There is no simple answer for it.
In some states, it's because the race is simply tighter than it was in the last election so is difficult for news and TV networks - who ordinarily call elections - to make a decisive projection.
Another reason is that there are more mail-in ballots this year than in elections gone by because of COVID-19.
They are taking longer to pour in and different states had different rules on when those could start being counted.
In any event, Trump is already contesting the results in several states. He says there has been voter fraud in Nevada, with people sending in ballots under dead residents' names, and from non-residents.
In Georgia, he says they weren't able to verify that the count was being done properly.
In Wisconsin, he is also demanding a recount, and in Michigan and Pennsylvania, he wants the counting to be halted.
Trump has not been seen in person since 2.30am on Wednesday, when he prematurely claimed election victory and said the entire process had been a 'fraud on the American people.'
In almost every state that Biden has won, Trump's lead has been strong at first then shrank as more ballots- specifically mail-in ballots - have been tallied up.
He thinks it is suspicious.
He said he did anticipate giving a result by the end of the day.
In Georgia, Superior Court judge James Bass said there was 'no evidence' to the Trump suit's claims that a 53 ballots arrived late and got mixed with other ballots. In Michigan, Judge Cynthia Stephens ruled against the Trump campaign's push to stop the count in order to gain additional access for its observers.
Georgia's Voting System Implementation Manager, Gabriel Sterling, said on Thursday the race in Georgia was still too close to call because the margin is so small at 0.2% and it is taking longer to count the votes because some counties are scanning paper votes rather than electronically counting them
'I have no basis to find that there is a substantial likelihood of success on the merits,' she said.
'All of the recent Biden claimed States will be legally challenged by us for Voter Fraud and State Election Fraud,' Trump tweeted Thursday amid the nationwide blitz of court challenges. 'Plenty of proof - just check out the Media. WE WILL WIN! America First!'
Trump's team scored a win in a Pennsylvania court, but not on an issue that appears likely to sway a race with thousands of ballots being processed.
'The Trump campaign called it a 'major victory,' but state officials appealed, saying it 'jeopardizes both the safety of the City Defendants’ canvass, plus the privacy of voters.'
Even if the Trump legal efforts don't ultimately prevail, they are already succeeding in slowing down the voting process, and Trump's allies are using them to claim Trump has seized an 'overwhelming victory' among 'verifiable' ballots.
https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMibmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmRhaWx5bWFpbC5jby51ay9uZXdzL2FydGljbGUtODkyMDE3MS9UcnVtcC1CaWRlbi1uZWNrLW5lY2stR2VvcmdpYS1wcmVzaWRlbnRzLWxlYWQtZGlwcy0yLTAwMC5odG1s0gFyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZGFpbHltYWlsLmNvLnVrL25ld3MvYXJ0aWNsZS04OTIwMTcxL2FtcC9UcnVtcC1CaWRlbi1uZWNrLW5lY2stR2VvcmdpYS1wcmVzaWRlbnRzLWxlYWQtZGlwcy0yLTAwMC5odG1s?oc=5
2020-11-06 04:00:00Z
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